The Root Cellar was created in 1981.
The word 'cellar' is both a verb (cellar, cellars, cellaring, cellared), and a noun (cellar, cellars). Example uses:Verb: He's an avid collector, he has a place underground to cellar his wine.Noun: We've converted the cellar into a playroom.
Gilbarco Veeder-Root was created in 1870.
The Cube Root of Uncertainty was created in 1970.
Cellar has two syllables.
Leonhard Euler, an 18th Century mathematician, invented it. But the square root was used before him by the Greeks.
The ISBN of The Root Cellar is 0919630782.
"The Root Cellar" by Janet Lunn has 192 pages in the paperback edition.
Out of the Cellar was created in 1983.
"Root Cellar" by Theodore Roethke is a free verse poem that explores the sensory experience of being in a dark, earthy root cellar. It focuses on the imagery and sounds of the cellar to create a haunting and intimate atmosphere.
Granny is down in the root cellar, right now. The cellar is flooded, again.
Rats in the Cellar was created in 1976.
The Beast in the Cellar was created in 1970.
The Onion Cellar was created in 2006.
We Cellar Children was created in 1960.
The Cellar - film - was created in 1989.
Down in the Cellar was created in 2000.
Other types of roots include fibrous roots (found in grasses and other monocots), aerial roots (found in plants like orchids and ivy), and adventitious roots (developing from any part of the plant other than the radicle). Taproots, like those found in carrots and radishes, are another type of root system.